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Federal Violent Crimes Lawyer South Dakota

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Last Updated: June 4, 2026

Federal Violent Crimes Lawyer South Dakota. Federal violent crime charges can move fast. You may already be on the government’s radar before charges are filed. You may already be facing charges in federal court. Or you may be trying to help a loved one after federal agents, officers, or prosecutors entered the picture.

Combs Waterkotte helps South Dakota clients protect themselves before the case gets further ahead of them. We defend people facing serious federal violent crime allegations nationwide and help them understand what the government has to prove, what risks they are facing, and what can be done right now to protect their future.

If you need help with a federal violent crime investigation, arrest, or indictment in South Dakota, call Combs Waterkotte at (314) 900-HELP or contact us online for a confidential consultation. We are available 24/7 and offer free consultations.


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Facing Federal Criminal Charges? Why They’re Different and How to Win

Combs Waterkotte, a leading federal criminal defense law firm, has handled over 10,000 cases successfully. This ebook guides you through the federal criminal defense process, how federal charges are different, and how to win.










    Read Book Online


    This page covers:

    • The first steps to take if federal investigators reach out in South Dakota
    • What can make a violent crime a federal offense
    • How federal violent crime cases differ from state-level criminal cases in South Dakota
    • The types of federal violent crime charges we handle, including Hobbs Act robbery, carjacking, kidnapping, firearm-related offenses, RICO, and conspiracy allegations
    • How our defense team evaluates, challenges, and prepares serious federal criminal cases


    Can Federal Charges Be Reduced Or Dismissed?
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    Can Federal Charges Be Reduced Or Dismissed?

    Can Federal Charges Be Reduced Or Dismissed? Chris Combs and Andrew Russek, lawyers with Combs Waterkotte, a leading federal criminal defense firm, talk about proffers, probation, and federal …

    Should I Hire A Lawyer Experienced In Federal Defense?
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    Should I Hire A Lawyer Experienced In Federal Defense?

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    What Penalties Apply To Federal Sex Crime Convictions?
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    Do Federal Sex Crimes Require Sex Offender Registration?
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    What Makes A Sex Crime Federal Rather Than State?
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    What Makes A Sex Crime Federal Rather Than State?

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    What Are Federal Sex Crime Charges?
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    Is the Death Penalty Possible in Federal Murder Cases?
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    What Is Federal Murder Or Federal Homicide?
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    What Is Federal Murder Or Federal Homicide?

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    Can Federal Charges Be Reduced Or Dismissed?
    Play video

    Can Federal Charges Be Reduced Or Dismissed?

    Can Federal Charges Be Reduced Or Dismissed? Chris Combs and Andrew Russek, lawyers with Combs Waterkotte, a leading federal criminal defense firm, talk about proffers, probation, and federal …

    Should I Hire A Lawyer Experienced In Federal Defense?
    Play video

    Should I Hire A Lawyer Experienced In Federal Defense?

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    What Penalties Apply To Federal Sex Crime Convictions?
    Play video

    What Penalties Apply To Federal Sex Crime Convictions?

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    Do Federal Sex Crimes Require Sex Offender Registration?
    Play video

    Do Federal Sex Crimes Require Sex Offender Registration?

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    What Makes A Sex Crime Federal Rather Than State?
    Play video

    What Makes A Sex Crime Federal Rather Than State?

    What Makes A Sex Crime Federal Rather Than State? Andrew Russek and Chris Combs of Combs Waterkotte discuss factors that play into a sex crime being classified as federal, rather than …

    What Are Federal Sex Crime Charges?
    Play video

    What Are Federal Sex Crime Charges?

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    Is the Death Penalty Possible in Federal Murder Cases?
    Play video

    Is the Death Penalty Possible in Federal Murder Cases?

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    What Is Federal Murder Or Federal Homicide?
    Play video

    What Is Federal Murder Or Federal Homicide?

    What Is Federal Murder Or Federal Homicide? Andrew Russek, a leading criminal defense attorney with Combs Waterkotte, discusses the distinction between murder and homicide as it relates to federal …



    Contacted by Federal Agents in South Dakota? Start Here

    If you have been contacted by federal agents or received a target letter, the case may already be further along than you realize. You may not know whether you are a witness, a target, or someone they believe has information. Even a short, informal conversation with federal agents can later be used in the case.

    You are not required to answer questions about the case without an attorney. Federal agents often ask questions after they have already gathered records, interviews, surveillance, or other evidence. Trying to be helpful can backfire if your words are misunderstood, incomplete, inconsistent, or inaccurate, and lying to federal agents can create new criminal exposure.

    If agents reach out to you in South Dakota, keep the following in mind:

    • Remain calm and respectful
    • Do not guess, exaggerate, minimize, or give answers just because you feel pressured
    • Do not discuss the facts of the case without a lawyer present
    • If agents approach you in person, ask whether you are free to leave
    • Do not agree to a search until you have spoken with an attorney
    • Do not delete messages, throw away records, or contact witnesses about what to say
    • Save any cards, voicemails, paperwork, subpoenas, or search warrant documents you receive
    • Contact an experienced federal criminal defense lawyer in South Dakota right away

    Asking for a lawyer is one of the most important steps you can take before statements are recorded, decisions are made, or charges are filed. Combs Waterkotte’s South Dakota federal violent crimes lawyers can communicate with federal agents or prosecutors on your behalf, help you understand whether you may be under investigation, and begin building a defense strategy before the case moves any further.



    What Makes a Violent Crime Federal?

    Federal prosecutors may get involved in a violent crime case for several reasons. In some cases, prosecutors claim the conduct crossed state lines. Sometimes the FBI, ATF, DEA, or another federal agency is involved early. A case may also become federal if prosecutors claim it affected interstate commerce, involved firearms, occurred on federal property, involved a federal interest, or connected to drugs, organized activity, or conspiracy allegations.

    In South Dakota, federal prosecutions do not work the same way as state criminal cases. They often involve longer investigations, grand jury subpoenas, federal agents, detailed discovery, detention hearings, sentencing guidelines, and prosecutors who may have spent months building the case before an arrest is made.

    Federal violent crime cases in South Dakota may involve allegations such as:

    These charges can carry severe penalties, including long prison sentences, mandatory minimums in certain cases, supervised release, fines, and lasting damage to your record, career, family, and reputation. An allegation is not a conviction, and a South Dakota federal violent crimes lawyer can start examining the weaknesses in the government’s case immediately.



    Why Federal Violent Crime Cases in South Dakota Are Different

    A federal violent crime case is not simply a local South Dakota criminal case moved into another building. The government often has more resources, more time, and multiple agencies working together. Depending on the allegations, agencies such as the FBI, ATF, DEA, U.S. Marshals, or local task forces may be involved.

    By the time you learn the government is looking at you, prosecutors may already have interviews, surveillance, phone records, search warrants, cooperating witnesses, forensic evidence, or grand jury testimony. That does not mean the case is unbeatable. It means the defense needs to start with a clear strategy instead of reacting one step behind.



    How Combs Waterkotte Defends Federal Violent Crime Cases in South Dakota

    Combs Waterkotte brings former prosecutors, federal court experience, and trial-tested defense strategy to serious federal criminal cases in South Dakota. We know how prosecutors think, how charging decisions are made, and how small details can change the direction of a case.

    A federal violent crime defense strategy may involve:

    • Studying the indictment, complaint, warrants, discovery, and charging documents
    • Looking beyond the government’s version of events
    • Challenging unlawful searches, seizures, or statements
    • Evaluating whether the alleged conduct actually supports the federal charge
    • Reviewing witness credibility, cooperation agreements, and incentives to testify
    • Preparing for detention hearings and bond arguments
    • Engaging federal prosecutors when negotiation serves the defense strategy
    • Building trial strategy from the start
    • Preparing sentencing arguments when reducing exposure becomes critical

    Some cases need aggressive trial preparation. Others require strategic negotiations focused on lowering exposure and improving the client’s position. Often, the strongest approach is to prepare for trial while also building leverage for negotiation. Our role is to explain your options clearly, help you understand the consequences of each decision, and fight for the strongest possible result at every stage.



    Examples of Federal Violent Crime Cases We Handle in South Dakota

    Federal Assault

    Federal assault charges may arise from alleged violence on federal property, against certain protected persons, or in situations that give federal courts jurisdiction. The defense may focus on intent, self-defense, injury, witness reliability, jurisdiction, and whether prosecutors can prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Hobbs Act Robbery

    The Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951, allows federal prosecutors to bring robbery or extortion charges when they allege the conduct affected interstate or foreign commerce. In practice, prosecutors often rely on the Hobbs Act when a robbery allegedly involves a business, commercial activity, or goods moving through interstate commerce.

    Carjacking

    A federal carjacking case can become especially serious when prosecutors claim a firearm, bodily injury, threats, or coordinated activity were involved. The defense may focus on identity, intent, force, intimidation, witness reliability, and whether the government can prove the federal elements of the offense.

    Kidnapping

    Kidnapping allegations may become federal when prosecutors claim interstate movement, unlawful restraint, or another jurisdictional hook. These cases often depend on the exact timeline, communications, witness accounts, and the government’s theory of how restraint or movement occurred.

    Firearm-Related Violent Offenses

    A firearm allegation can dramatically increase the stakes in a federal violent crime case. Federal firearm charges are often paired with robbery, drug trafficking, conspiracy, or other serious allegations. The defense may challenge possession, use, knowledge, intent, and whether the evidence actually supports the firearm enhancement or charge.

    RICO, Gang, and Conspiracy Allegations

    In some cases, prosecutors use conspiracy, racketeering, or gang-related theories to connect one person to conduct allegedly committed by others. The danger in these cases is that prosecutors may try to treat separate people, separate acts, and separate evidence as part of one larger story. The defense must focus on what you personally knew, what you actually did, and whether prosecutors can prove an agreement, participation, and intent.

    Murder-for-Hire and Violent Crime Conspiracies

    Murder-for-hire and violent crime conspiracy allegations often depend on messages, recordings, informants, undercover activity, digital evidence, and witness credibility. Because these charges are so serious, the defense must examine what was said, what was done, what was recorded, and whether prosecutors are reaching beyond the actual evidence.



    Contact a Federal Violent Crimes Lawyer in South Dakota

    A federal violent crime case can put your freedom, future, family, and reputation at risk. But you are not without rights. You still have options. And the government still has to prove the allegations in court.

    Combs Waterkotte defends people across the country facing serious federal charges. With former prosecutors, federal court experience, trial experience, 24/7 availability, and free consultations, our team is ready to help you understand what comes next and how to protect yourself.

    Call Combs Waterkotte at (314) 900-HELP or contact us online to schedule a confidential consultation with a South Dakota federal violent crimes lawyer.

    Federal Violent Crimes Lawyer FAQs for South Dakota

    What makes a violent crime federal?

    A violent crime can become federal when prosecutors allege interstate commerce, state-line issues, federal property, a federal interest, firearms, drug trafficking, conspiracy, or racketeering. The answer depends on the statute, the facts, and why federal prosecutors believe the case belongs in federal court.

    Should I talk to federal agents if I have nothing to hide?

    Before answering questions about a federal investigation, speak with a federal criminal defense lawyer. Even truthful answers can be incomplete, misunderstood, or used against you later. Using your right to counsel is one of the clearest ways to protect yourself during a federal investigation.

    What happens after a federal indictment?

    Once an indictment is filed, the case usually moves through court appearances, arraignment, bond or detention issues, discovery, motion practice, negotiations, and trial preparation. Some cases resolve through plea negotiations, while others go to trial. The right path depends on the facts, the charges, the evidence, and your goals.

    Can federal violent crime charges be reduced?

    Sometimes. Charges may be reduced through negotiations, motion practice, evidentiary challenges, cooperation issues, or weaknesses in the government’s case. In other situations, the best strategy may be preparing for trial. A federal defense lawyer can review the facts and explain what options are realistic.

    Are federal violent crimes punished more harshly than state crimes?

    Federal violent crime charges can carry severe penalties, particularly when the case involves firearms, mandatory minimums, conspiracy allegations, or prior convictions. The federal sentencing guidelines can play a major role in the potential outcome. The earlier the defense starts addressing sentencing exposure, the better positioned the client may be.

    Can Combs Waterkotte help before charges are filed?

    Yes. Pre-charge representation can be especially important in federal violent crime investigations. An attorney can communicate with agents or prosecutors, help you avoid damaging statements, respond to subpoenas, preserve important evidence, and prepare for what may come next.

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